‘Night owls’ may have worse heart health — but why?
Emerging evidence suggests that “night owls” are more likely to have poor heart health and a higher risk of heart attack or stroke than “morning
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Emerging evidence suggests that “night owls” are more likely to have poor heart health and a higher risk of heart attack or stroke than “morning
A study in Iceland found that microbes are hoarding more nitrogen for themselves, altering nutrient cycling and leaving less for plants.
Physicists saw excitons, a type of quasiparticle, undergo a reversible phase transition from superfluid to supersolid for the first time, opening new doors for studying
The ancient Olympic games were crowded with male athletes, but were there opportunities for females to compete in sports?
Deep inside Earth lies a hidden world of “intraterrestrials” that have been dormant for hundreds of thousands of years — what are they waiting to
A collapsed sewer line, about 8 miles from the White House, pumped 368 Olympic-sized swimming pools worth of wastewater into the Potomac. Repairs could take
Gregor Mendel described his experiments with pea plants and proved that genes are transmitted in discrete units, with certain fundamental laws of inheritance.
There may be something more than just a bad habit behind this behavior.
The sunspot region 4366 fired off dozens of powerful solar flares in 24 hours, including the single strongest flare since 2024. Auroras are possible later
Archaeologists have discovered Anglo-Saxon children buried with a spear, shield and buckles, gear that’s usually seen in warriors’ graves.
A clinical trial shows that AI-assisted mammography can detect more cases of dangerous cancer and reduce missed diagnoses.
A meta-analysis of 52 studies that included over 5,000 transgender people suggests that transgender women’s physical fitness after hormone therapy is comparable to that of
NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this image of a solar flare — seen as the bright flash toward the upper middle — on Feb. 4
NPR’s Scott Simon speaks to writer Matt Klein about how to win back our attention in an age of infinite information.